The Windows 10 version 1803 update — presumably to be called the Spring Creators Update — rollout has been delayed by Microsoft due to a “blocking bug.” While no specifics on the bug were indicated, a blocking bug is one that is serious enough to delay a rollout of new software until it is fixed.

According to Windows Central, the rollout was supposed to start yesterday, on April 10th, but Microsoft found the bug over the weekend.

According to my sources, over the weekend Microsoft found a blocking bug that, while apparently rather rare, is impactful enough to hold the release until the issue is fixed. Microsoft has internal criteria that a build needs to pass before it goes out to the public, and that criteria is extra thorough when it comes to the production ‘ring,’ as you might expect. Thanks to feedback from Insiders in the Fast, Slow, and Release Preview rings, this bug was caught before rollout began.

There was also an update yesterday for Windows Insiders on the Fast, Slow, and Release Preview rings — KB4100375 — so it’s possible that they are testing the bug fix but the release notes are pretty vague.

This update includes the following quality improvements (no new OS features):

It’s quite likely that the bug is part of the security updates in the last bullet point but we don’t know for sure. On that note, it could still be a couple weeks or longer before Windows 10 version 1803 starts rolling out to the general public.

What do you think about the Windows 10 Spring Creators Update rollout delay? Let us know in the comments below or on Google+, Twitter, or Facebook.

About Techaeris

Techaeris was founded in 2013 by Alex Hernandez who is the Editor-In-Chief and Owner. Techaeris is fast becoming your new source for technology news, technology reviews and all things geek/nerd entertainment related. We cover movies, comics, books, gaming, tech and industry news all in one clean place.